Be sure to include your name, daytime phone number, address, name and phone number of legal next-of-kin, method of payment, and the name of the funeral home/crematory to contact for verification of death.

Attack in Lebanon reflects ISIS’ resolve to disrupt wide region

The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria apparently expanded its operations to Lebanon on Friday, narrowly failing to assassinate a top Shiite Muslim security official with a suicide car bomb just hours after a series of government raids captured at least 20 suspected militants described as being members of ISIS in a central Beirut hotel.

Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim, the director of the powerful General Security Directorate, had passed a checkpoint in the Beqaa Valley on the highway linking Beirut and Damascus on Friday morning when a suicide car bomb exploded, killing at least two people and wounding dozens, but left his convoy unscathed.

Lebanon went on high alert last week after ISIS, which has been occasionally fighting the Lebanon-based Shiite radical group Hezbollah in Syria, took over a large swath of northern Iraq as part of its declared goal to turn the entire Levant region, which includes Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Jordan, into an Islamic caliphate. ISIS presently controls much of eastern Syria and western and northern Iraq and has been pressing a conventional military offensive backed by disenfranchised Sunni tribes on Baghdad.

In Iraq, the nation’s top Shiite cleric during a sermon on Friday urged Iraqis to unite to expel militants from the country and called for the formation of a new government.

Grand Ayatollah Ali al Sistani said a new government would help avoid “past mistakes,” a thinly veiled critique of Nouri al Maliki, a Shiite politician who has served as Iraq’s prime minister since 2006.

The cleric described ISIS as a “plague” on the region.

Friday’s deadly car bombing came just hours after a series of raids by Lebanese security forces on a central Beirut hotel arrested 22 people and saw armed men chasing suspects through the streets of one of the capital’s most cosmopolitan central districts. Earlier, the government announced that it had uncovered a plot to assassinate both Ibrahim and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, both prominent Shiite Muslim political figures and close allies of Hezbollah.

It was not precisely clear if the attack was directly aimed at Ibrahim in that spot, as some local security officials claimed, but he had been named a target by ISIS in the past because of his high-profile involvement in both cracking down on Syrian rebels along the Lebanese border as well as in negotiating the release of Lebanese hostages held in Syria.

Maj. Gen. Ibrahim Basbous of the Internal Security Forces told reporters on the scene that it seemed the car was meant to explode in Beirut and might have doubled back to hit Ibrahim’s convoy in a incredible coincidence.

“The car was headed from the Beqaa to Beirut. ISF patrols chased it, compelling its driver to return to the Beqaa,” Basbous said, according to local media reports.

Lebanon had been the victim of a dozen suicide bombings spanning from last summer until February by groups including al Qaida and ISIS in revenge for Hezbollah’s strong support for the Syrian regime, a move that angered large swaths of Lebanon’s Sunni population, which mostly has supported the rebels.

A series of arrests and military operations by both the government inside Lebanon and by Hezbollah along the Syrian-Lebanese border appeared to end the attacks. But fear that ISIS would reconstitute a militant network appeared to come true on Friday.

“This is why we’re fighting in Syria,” a Hezbollah commander said by instant messaging from Beirut; he asked to speak anonymously because the group does not allow members to speak to the press. “These Takfiris have shown they want to take over the entire region and have an agenda to fight Iran and destroy the Shiite government in Iraq. We know they will come for Lebanon again and are ready to fight them every day.”

Lebanese Shiite frequently refer to ISIS and other Syrian rebel groups as Takfiris, an Arabic word that describes a radical strain of Islam that believes that insufficiently pious Muslims should be killed.

The commander said that Hezbollah’s intelligence services, which have worked closely with the Lebanese army to prevent attacks, had discovered an ISIS financier working in Beirut who was arrested Thursday and gave interrogators information that led to Friday’s raids and alerts.

His claim that Hezbollah provided the initial intelligence could not be confirmed.

Before any of the incidents on Friday, the Amal Party, led by Berri, had canceled a public meeting with the United Nations that the speaker planned to attend, because of an unspecified security threat.

Just hours later, intelligence agents and security forces descended on the Napoleon Hotel in the normally quiet Hamra district of Beirut, arresting suspects and raiding other locations throughout the city.

“There are more of these terrorists throughout the city,” a security official, speaking anonymously because he lacks permission to speak to the media, said by text message. “We know who they are and there will be more arrests.”

Nation & World Videos

Join the Discussion

The Wichita Eagle is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere on the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.